TI work moves fast, but the existing drawings are often stale. The review has to separate verified conditions from inherited assumptions.
Tenant improvement projects are often reviewed on compressed schedules because the space needs to reopen quickly. That urgency creates a dangerous habit: teams treat old as-builts as if they are measured survey data. They are not. They are a record of what someone believed was installed at the end of a past project.
The best TI reviews mark every critical dependency as either verified, likely, or unknown. Helonic supports that workflow by surfacing cross-discipline assumptions that deserve field confirmation before demolition or rough-in.
The most painful TI conflicts are not always visible in the finish plan. They show up above ceilings, inside shafts, at electrical panels, and around plumbing stacks. A minor-looking layout change can fail when existing capacity, route, or access is not there.
For a deeper look at occupied-building issues, see the renovation vs new construction guide and the tenant improvement coordination breakdown.
A strong TI drawing review compares the proposed work to the existing condition record and then identifies the unknowns. The output should be a preconstruction verification list, not only an RFI log.
Helonic helps by giving teams a structured way to find and document those gaps early, while there is still time to survey, redesign, or price the impact.
Milind is the co-founder and CEO of Helonic, where he leads product and go-to-market for AI-powered construction drawing analysis. He works closely with general contractors, project managers, estimators, and owners to understand how drawing quality drives project outcomes - and where AI can reduce RFIs, change orders, and rework. Milind has interviewed hundreds of construction professionals across project delivery roles, from preconstruction estimators at ENR top-400 contractors to facilities directors at institutional owners, and uses those conversations to shape both product direction and the way Helonic talks about the work.
How this page was researched: Tenant-improvement verification practices were cross-checked against as-built and record-drawing reliability guidance and typical existing-condition survey scopes. Examples reflect the stale-assumption risks Helonic most often flags when comparing TI drawings against available record drawings.
Last reviewed by Milind Sagaram · May 2026
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